Pope Benedict XVI waves as he leaves his final general audience in St. Peter's Square at the Vatican Feb. 27. (CNS photo/Paul Haring)
Below is the text of Pope Benedict XVI’s final General
Audience address, delivered today in St. Peter’s Square before a crowd of tens
of thousands of the faithful (translation from Vatican Information Services):
Like
the Apostle Paul in the Biblical text that we have heard, I feel in my heart
that I have to especially thank God who guides and builds up the Church, who
plants His Word and thus nourishes the faith in His People. At this moment my
heart expands and embraces the whole Church throughout the world and I thank
God for the 'news' that, in these years of my Petrine ministry, I have received
about the faith in the Lord Jesus Christ and for the love that truly circulates
in the Body of the Church, making it to live in the love and the hope that
opens us to and guides us towards the fullness of life, towards our heavenly
homeland.
I feel
that I am carrying everyone with me in prayer in this God-given moment when I
am collecting every meeting, every trip, every pastoral visit. I am gathering
everyone and everything in prayer to entrust it to the Lord: so that we may be
filled with the knowledge of His will through all spiritual wisdom and
understanding in order to live in a manner worthy of the Lord and His love,
bearing fruit in every good work (cf. Col 1:9-10).
At
this moment I have great confidence because I know, we all know, that the
Gospel's Word of truth is the strength of the Church; it is her life. The
Gospel purifies and renews, bearing fruit, wherever the community of believers
hears it and welcomes God's grace in truth and in love. This is my confidence,
this is my joy.
When,
on 19 April almost eight years ago I accepted to take on the Petrine ministry,
I had the firm certainty that has always accompanied me: this certainty for the
life of the Church from the Word of God. At that moment, as I have already
expressed many times, the words that resounded in my heart were: Lord, what do
You ask of me? It is a great weight that You are placing on my shoulders but,
if You ask it of me, I will cast my nets at your command, confident that You
will guide me, even with all my weaknesses. And eight years later I can say
that the Lord has guided me. He has been close to me. I have felt His presence
every day. It has been a stretch of the Church's path that has had moments of
joy and light, but also difficult moments. I felt like St. Peter and the
Apostles in the boat on the See of Galilee. The Lord has given us many days of
sunshine and light breezes, days when the fishing was plentiful, but also times
when the water was rough and the winds against us, just as throughout the whole
history of the Church, when the Lord seemed to be sleeping. But I always knew
that the Lord is in that boat and I always knew that the boat of the Church is
not mine, not ours, but is His. And the Lord will not let it sink. He is the
one who steers her, of course also through those He has chosen because that is
how He wanted it. This was and is a certainty that nothing can tarnish. And
that is why my heart today is filled with gratitude to God, because He never
leftthe whole Church or mewithout His consolation, His light, or His love.
We are
in the Year of Faith, which I desired precisely in order to strengthen our
faith in God in a context that seems to relegate it more and more to the
background. I would like to invite everyone to renew their firm trust in the
Lord, to entrust ourselves like children to God's arms, certain that those arms
always hold us up and are what allow us to walk forward each day, even when it
is a struggle. I would like everyone to feel beloved of that God who gave His
Son for us and who has shown us His boundless love. I would like everyone to
feel the joy of being Christian. In a beautiful prayer, which can be recited
every morning, say: 'I adore you, my God and I love you with all my heart.
Thank you for having created me, for having made me Christian...' Yes, we are
happy for the gift of faith. It is the most precious thing, which no one can
take from us! Let us thank the Lord for this every day, with prayer and with a
coherent Christian life. God loves us, but awaits us to also love Him!
It is
not only God who I wish to thank at this time. A pope is not alone in guiding
Peter's barque, even if it is his primary responsibility. I have never felt
alone in bearing the joy and the weight of the Petrine ministry. The Lord has
placed at my side so many people who, with generosity and love for God and the
Church, have helped me and been close to me. First of all, you, dear Brother
Cardinals: your wisdom, your advice, and your friendship have been precious to
me. My collaborators, starting with my secretary of state who has accompanied
me faithfully over the years; the Secretariat of State and the whole of the
Roman Curia, as well as all those who, in their various areas, serve the Holy
See. There are many faces that are never seen, remaining in obscurity, but
precisely in their silence, in their daily dedication in a spirit of faith and
humility, they were a sure and reliable support to me. A special thought goes
to the Church of Rome, my diocese! I cannot forget my Brothers in the
episcopate and in the priesthood, consecrated persons, and the entire People of
God. In my pastoral visits, meetings, audiences, and trips I always felt great
care and deep affection, but I have also loved each and every one of you,
without exception, with that pastoral love that is the heart of every pastor,
especially the Bishop of Rome, the Successor of the Apostle Peter. Every day I
held each of you in prayer, with a father's heart.
I wish
to send my greetings and my thanks to all: a pope's heart extends to the whole
world. And I would like to express my gratitude to the Diplomatic Corps
accredited to the Holy See, which makes the great family of Nations present
here. Here I am also thinking of all those who work for good communication and
I thank them for their important service.
At
this point I would also like to wholeheartedly thank all of the many people
around the world who, in recent weeks, have sent me touching tokens of concern,
friendship, and prayer. Yes, the Pope is never alone. I feel this again now in
such a great way that it touches my heart. The Pope belongs to everyone and
many people feel very close to him. It's true that I receive letters from the
world's notablesfrom heads of states, from religious leaders, from
representatives of the world of culture, etc. But I also receive many letters
from ordinary people who write to me simply from their hearts and make me feel
their affection, which is born of our being together with Christ Jesus, in the
Church. These people do not write to me the way one would write, for example,
to a prince or a dignitary that they don't know. They write to me as brothers
and sisters or as sons and daughters, with the sense of a very affectionate
family tie. In this you can touch what the Church isnot an organization, not
an association for religious or humanitarian ends, but a living body, a
communion of brothers and sisters in the Body of Jesus Christ who unites us
all. Experiencing the Church in this way and being able to almost touch with
our hands the strength of His truth and His love is a reason for joy at a time
when many are speaking of its decline. See how the Church is alive today!
In
these last months I have felt that my strength had diminished and I asked God
earnestly in prayer to enlighten me with His light to make me make the right
decision, not for my own good, but for the good of the Church. I have taken
this step in full awareness of its seriousness and also its newness, but with a
profound peace of mind. Loving the Church also means having the courage to make
difficult, agonized choices, always keeping in mind the good of the Church, not
of oneself.
Allow
me here to return once again to 19 April, 2005. The gravity of the decision lay
precisely in the fact that, from that moment on, I was always and for always
engaged by the Lord. Alwayswhoever assumes the Petrine ministry no longer has
any privacy. He belongs always and entirely to everyone, to the whole Church.
His life, so to speak, is totally deprived of its private dimension. I
experienced, and I am experiencing it precisely now, that one receives life
precisely when they give it. Before I said that many people who love the Lord
also love St. Peter's Successor and are fond of him; that the Pope truly has
brothers and sisters, sons and daughters all over the world and that he feels
safe in the embrace of their communion; because he no longer belongs to himself
but he belongs to all and all belong to him.
'Always'
is also 'forever'--there is no return to private life. My decision to renounce
the active exercise of the ministry does not revoke this. I am not returning to
private life, to a life of trips, meetings, receptions, conferences, etc. I am
not abandoning the cross, but am remaining beside the Crucified Lord in a new
way. I no longer bear the power of the office for the governance of the Church,
but I remain in the service of prayer, within St. Peter's paddock, so to speak.
St. Benedict, whose name I bear as Pope, will be a great example to me in this.
He has shown us the way for a life that, active or passive, belongs wholly to
God's work.
I also
thank each and every one of you for the respect and understanding with which
you have received this important decision. I will continue to accompany the
Church's journey through prayer and reflection, with the dedication to the Lord
and His Bride that I have tried to live every day up to now and that I want to
always live. I ask you to remember me to God, and above all to pray for the
Cardinals who are called to such an important task, and for the new Successor
of the Apostle Peter. Many the Lord accompany him with the light and strength
of His Spirit.
We
call upon the maternal intercession of Mary, the Mother of God and of the
Church, that she might accompany each of us and the entire ecclesial community.
We entrust ourselves to her with deep confidence.
Dear
friends! God guides His Church, always sustaining her even and especially in
difficult times. Let us never lose this vision of faith, which is the only true
vision of the path of the Church and of the world. In our hearts, in the heart
of each one of you, may there always be the joyous certainty that the Lord is
beside us, that He does not abandon us, that He is near and embraces us with
His love. Thank you.